Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Hiring female coaches shows NBA trending the right way

- By Tim Reynolds Associated Press

NBA Commission­er Adam Silver wants more women throughout the league. He’s getting his wish.

In recent days, two significan­t moves were made, with Kristi Toliver being added to Washington’s staff of assistant coaches, and Chasity Melvin getting hired as an assistant coach with Charlotte’s G League affiliate in Greensboro, North Carolina.

And on Monday, two female referees were making regular-season debuts.

They’re all signs of progress.

Few seem to notice, which also is not all bad.

Women are a becoming a bigger part of the league now than ever before. The hires of Toliver and Melvin were not overlooked; it just no longer seems like such an unusual thing to bring a woman into the fray of an NBA club, probably because the likes of San Antonio assistant Becky Hammon, former Sacramento assistant Nancy Lieberman, Dallas assistant Jenny Boucek, Clippers G League assistant Natalie Nakase and Memphis analyst Nicki Gross took care of the first wave of trailblazi­ng.

“I think it’s great and I think it’s great for the NBA,” said Charlotte’s James Borrego, the league’s first Hispanic full-time coach. “It speaks to our league, the diversity, the openness, the inclusion and I’m proud to be part of that, part of a league that’s open to that. I’ve been around Becky Hammon for a number of years now. These are bright women that belong in our league.”

Certainly, there’s much more progress to be made, including in business offices around the league — as well as on the sidelines.

There’s never been a female NBA head coach, though Hammon — a longtime part of the staff in San Antonio, where Borrego was before taking the Charlotte job — seems on the cusp of breaking that glass ceiling. Only three women have been hired as full-time NBA referees, though Natalie Sago and Ashley MoyerGleic­h will debut on Monday and are already highly respected by many peers.

Moyer-Gleich is part of the crew handling Indiana at Minnesota. Sago is working the Memphis at Utah game.

They join the likes of Dee Kantner, Violet Palmer, Brenda Pantoja and stillactiv­e Lauren Holtkamp as women to work regular-season games. Pantoja was a non-staff ref, and for now so are Sago and MoyerGleic­h.

Borrego expects the numbers of women in the league to increase.

“They’re here to stay,” Borrego said. “That’s not going anywhere. It’s only going to trend in that direction.”

SCORING UP

If you think there’s been a lot more scoring than usual in the NBA this season, you’re right.

Granted, six days of basketball is a small —and statistica­lly insignific­ant— sample size in a six-month season. But teams averaged

106.3 points per game last season, and they’re off to an average of 113.3 points so far this season.

Should that average somehow hold up over the course of a full season, it would be the league’s highest since teams averaged

116.7 points in 1969-70. “This is a new age of basketball and this is where we are,” Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said. “The days of games in the 80s are probably done. Everything’s spread out. It’s freedom of movement. There’s four attackers and often times five

3-point shooters and there are missiles flying everywhere.” For perspectiv­e: There were eight instances in October 2017 of teams scoring 130 or more points. So far in October 2018, there’s been nine — with 10 days of play left this month.

But big numbers hasn’t meant every game is a rout. There’s already been 12 games this season decided by three points or less.

G LEAGUE CHANGES

Over the next few weeks, more details will likely come out about the G League’s plan to offer $125,000 contracts to elite prospects who aren’t yet eligible for the NBA draft.

Much of the details remain unclear: who will get them, how they’ll get them, how many deals will be offered.

Another murky part of all this is how the players will be assigned to teams.

What would make the most sense is for the G League to go back into the NBA’s past for an answer there. The last territoria­l pick in the NBA was in 1965, but that’s the road the G League needs to go down now. For a league that’s still looking to grow, imagine the possibilit­ies of putting a potential star with plenty of potential near his hometown. It’ll generate interest, which the G League surely could use.

 ?? BEN MARGOT — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? NBA commission­er Adam Silver, left, speaks next to Golden State Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob during an awards ceremony to recognize the team’s NBA championsh­ip prior to a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder.
BEN MARGOT — ASSOCIATED PRESS NBA commission­er Adam Silver, left, speaks next to Golden State Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob during an awards ceremony to recognize the team’s NBA championsh­ip prior to a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder.

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